HomeTop StoriesNow that al-Assad is gone, the German opposition is calling for the...

Now that al-Assad is gone, the German opposition is calling for the return of Syrian refugees

A day after Syrian rebel groups took control of the capital Damascus, senior leaders of Germany’s conservative CDU/CSU bloc proposed encouraging refugees to return to the country.

Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s strongman president, fled to Russia after a coalition of rebel groups, including Islamist extremist fighters, swept through previously government-controlled areas of the country in a rapid offensive.

Germany should now charter planes to send Syrians who fled al-Assad’s regime back to their homeland, and offer cash incentives to encourage people to take the flight, a deputy leader of the conservative CDU/CSU said block Monday.

“As a first step I would say we make an offer. How about if the German government says: anyone who wants to return to Syria, we will charter planes for them and give them a starting amount of 1,000 euros.” ($1,060), Jens Spahn told broadcaster RTL/ntv on Monday morning.

Spahn, a former health minister, said Germany should also push for an international conference on Syria’s reconstruction, together with Turkey, Austria and Jordan.

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“If things normalize and stabilize at home, if there are prospects there, then there is an expectation to return,” Spahn said. “But we can certainly only judge that in a few days and weeks.”

But the CDU/CSU’s focus on Syrian refugees drew criticism from other German politicians, including Katrin Göring-Eckardt, a Green Left party and the vice president of parliament.

“After a day and a half, I think this is an inappropriate domestic policy debate,” Göring-Eckardt told RBB Radio in Berlin.

If Syria becomes a safe country, people must and will return, but that debate must wait until after this period of great instability, she said.

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